No need to do anything "special" to get "special" characters (like the euro
symbol) if you're using any Microsoft OS, from Windows XP up to Windows 7.
Just use the Windows "Character Map Utility" that came installed on your
computer when you bought it. Visit the MS website to find out how to us
Hi Brian,
>> At 09:06 23/02/2016 -0800, Craig Russell wrote:
>>
>> I'm trying to create a PDF form ...
>> But the form fields don't behave the way I want them to. I'd like
>> the user to click in a form field and type, with the text showing up
>> right there in place. Instead, the text typed in
Dear Dennis,
Many thanks indeed for the detailed examination, and for all your efforts!
I believe the file was created with LibreOffice, perhaps an older version
thereof.
One note regrading (3) in Forensic Analysis, if I provide 12345 as a
password, I don't get a corrupted file error message eit
More about "usual" & "special" characters:
There are a lot of symbols available through using the ALT+ method, the
thing is that the codes you use depend on your system locale. The symbols
shown on this site have nothing to do with my locale. Perhaps the best way
to see what's available is to star
Martin, you're using RoadRunner so I assume you're in the USA. If that's
so, I can help by snail-mailing a chart that gives the kybd codes for all
of the usual alphanumeric characters, plus €, ¥, æ, Ø, and a great many
other useful symbols. You simply use the ALT key with a 4-digit
numeric-pad co